One thing that strikes me is that the model first tries using "inclusive language" in one answer - and literally states so, using this specific term - but seems to interpret it in a more mathematical sense (like set inclusion). Then seamlessly switches to the expected DEI spiel in the next paragraph.
For one thing, it makes me suspect that something with the words "inclusive language" was automatically added to the prompt. But more interesting is how it responds to this demand in two different ways, illustrating a "thought process" that is very much unlike that of a human with normal verbal reasoning ability.
I am not a psychologist, but remember reading that schizophrenic people sometimes confuse different meanings of words in a similar way, jumping from one meaning to another without noticing.
> > Question is: "Alice has 60 brothers and she also has 212 sisters. How many sisters does Alice’s brother have?"
> The right answer depends on how Alice identifies I guess? :)
Given that the wording of the question specifically identifies Alice as "she", rather than using a gender-neutral pronoun or no pronoun at all, I think inferring that she identifies as female is reasonable.
One thing that strikes me is that the model first tries using "inclusive language" in one answer - and literally states so, using this specific term - but seems to interpret it in a more mathematical sense (like set inclusion). Then seamlessly switches to the expected DEI spiel in the next paragraph.
For one thing, it makes me suspect that something with the words "inclusive language" was automatically added to the prompt. But more interesting is how it responds to this demand in two different ways, illustrating a "thought process" that is very much unlike that of a human with normal verbal reasoning ability.
I am not a psychologist, but remember reading that schizophrenic people sometimes confuse different meanings of words in a similar way, jumping from one meaning to another without noticing.